12 books found
by Arthur Frederick Sievers, Benjamin Schwartz, Bernice Eldon Shaffer, Charles Hugh Gable, Chase Going Woodhouse, Edwin Richard Kalmbach, George Milton Warren, Guy Eston Yerkes, James Robert Dawson, Jesse Washington Tapp (Sr.), John B. Hutson, Le Roy August Reynoldson, Leland Ossian Howard, Lewis B. Flohr, M. A. Crosby, Morley Allan Jull, Oliver I. Snapp, Robert George Hill, Walter Wesley McLaughlin, Wayne Crocker Nason, William Andrew Thomas, William Randolph Walton, William Renwick Beattie, Alfred R. Lee, Fred Corry Bishopp, George W. Collier, John Holmes Martin, Warren Burnette Shook, William Alfonso Baker, Carl Raymond Arnold, Lawrence Clark Woodruff, Walter Raymond Humphries
1929
"Many know the annoyance and ill effects of wet basements and cellars, but comparatively few are familiar with good remedial methods. This bulletin gives needed information ... Many wet cellars might be dry had a little more attention been given to their location and construction and to grading the earth around them to shed water quickly. Frequently wet cellars can be made dry by gravity drainage of the site -- the simplest and surest method of avoiding ground-water troubles. Many dam cellars can easily be made less damp by better window ventilation. Water-tight construction and waterproofing and damp-proofing methods require good materials, but the most important thing -- in fact the vital thing -- is thorough workmanship in each and every detail."--Page ii.
by Alfred R. Lee, Amer Benjamin Nystrom, Ara Marcus Daniels, Archibald Dixon Shamel, Charles Vancouver Piper, Charlotte Chatfield, Clarence Luther Forsling, Dean Humboldt Rose, Edwin LeFevre, Ellsworth Zouave Russell, Eugene S. Schultz, F. P. Downing, George Milton Warren, Homer Columbus Thompson, James Herbert Beattie, Jesse Washington Tapp (Sr.), John Chambers McDowell, John Charles Walker, John Holmes Martin, Orator Fuller Cook, Ruth O'Brien, Wayne Crocker Nason, Carl Stone Pomeroy, Charles Edward Seitz, Clyde Evert Leighty, Harold Addison Spilman, Robert Doane Martin, Waldo Ernest Grimes, J. C. Glenn, Ralph Emerson Caryl
1928
Many farmers do not realize that small streams may be used in generating electricity. Electrical equipment on the farm saves time and labor, but if it is to be a sound investment the cost of installation should not be greater than the benefits obtained can justify. The purpose of this bulletin is to acquaint farmers with the possibilities of developing the power of small streams by converting it into electrical energy and the uses to which such power can be put; to give information which will enable them to avoid unnecessary expenditures; to explain how to determine the power a stream will supply; and to indicate the sources from which to secure additional information regarding the approximate cost of installing a plant suited to the power available. The details of design, installation, and operation of electrical equipment are not within the scope of this bulletin.
Vols. for 18 -1908 include Proceedings of the State board of equalization, 18 -1907.
Includes also Annual report of the State Highway Patrol for the period, September 1, 1921-